The supernatural comedy — starring Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd, Harold Ramis and Ernie Hudson as paranormal experts battling a spectral invasion of New York City — is not only hilariously funny but also full of witty but respectful faith references and characters.

Don’t believe me, watch for the priests, rabbis and nuns — and the Archbishop of New York. As for references, here’s just a sample from a compilation I wrote in 2016 (click here for the whole thing):

Wayde King and Brett Raymer of ATM (Acrylic Tank Manufacturing) head to the SAP Center in San Jose, California, home to the San Jose Sharks pro hockey team. Because of this, it’s nicknamed “The Shark Tank.”

The 17-foot long aquarium is filled with teal-tinged decor, with Sharks logos, hockey sticks and a goalie mask reminding the aquatic entertainers they’re not in the ocean anymore. There’s even a mini version of the Sharks head that the players skate out from every game. Designed and installed by Las Vegas-based Acrylic Tank Manufacturing, it’ll be featured on an episode of the Animal Planet series, “Tanked,” this fall.

For budding marine biologists, the species in the tank include epaulette sharks, horned sharks, bamboo sharks and even a catshark. They’re all really little guys right now, but they’ll grow to be about 3 feet long, much bigger than the tangs, triggerfish and other fish in the aquarium. At Thursday’s unveiling, though, mascot S.J. Sharkie dwarfed them all.

In this new episode featuring master baker Buddy Valastro of Carlo’s Bakery in Hoboken, N.J., Buddy makes an “Alice in Wonderland” cake for a children’s theater; chief designer Mauro whips ups a vintage-baseball-themed cake for the Carlos Beltran Foundation; and a family needs a confection for a quinceanera celebration.

The Incredibles is exhilarating entertainment with unexpected depths. It’s a bold, bright, funny and furious superhero cartoon that dares to take sly jabs at the culture of entitlement, from the shallow doctrine of self-esteem that affirms everybody, encouraging mediocrity and penalizing excellence, to the litigation culture that demands recompense for everyone if anything ever happens, to the detriment of the genuinely needy.